NNAT Exam Timetable: Complete Guide to NNAT3 Testing, Levels, Timing, and Scores
The Naglieri Nonverbal Ability Test is different from admissions exams like the ACT, SSAT, ISEE, or SHSAT. It is normally scheduled by schools and districts, so this guide gives families a reliable 2026–2027 planning timetable, test structure, score formulas, and preparation roadmap.
Table of Contents
What Is the NNAT?
The Naglieri Nonverbal Ability Test, commonly called the NNAT or NNAT3, is a nonverbal reasoning assessment used by many schools and districts as part of gifted and talented identification. Instead of asking students to read long passages, recall vocabulary, or show memorized academic content, the NNAT asks students to reason with shapes, patterns, diagrams, and visual relationships.
This makes the NNAT especially useful when a school wants to measure reasoning potential across a broad student population. Because the items are built from geometric figures and pictorial directions, the test can be more accessible to English language learners, students with limited verbal background, students with dyslexia, and students whose strongest reasoning may not appear in traditional reading-heavy tests.
Who uses it?
Public school districts, gifted and talented programs, private schools, charter schools, and educational evaluators may use NNAT3 as one part of an identification system.
What does it measure?
It measures nonverbal general ability through abstract designs, matrix reasoning, visual pattern recognition, and problem-solving with shapes.
Is it a national exam?
No. The test is published nationally, but the testing calendar is local. Each district decides its own testing window, grade level, retesting policy, and eligibility rules.
Official Pearson NNAT3 Video
The video below is embedded as a related official Pearson NNAT3 YouTube video. Use it as a quick orientation before reviewing the timetable, levels, and score explanations on this page.
Video embed: Official Pearson NNAT3 video linked from Pearson’s NNAT3 information page. If the video does not load inside WordPress, open the preview in a browser and confirm that iframe embeds are allowed by your theme/security plugin.
2026–2027 NNAT Exam Timetable
Because NNAT is usually administered through schools and districts, there is no single official national public calendar. A district may test all students in one grade during fall universal screening, test referred students in winter, or use spring testing for gifted placement decisions for the following school year. The timetable below gives a practical 2026–2027 planning model for families.
| Planning Period | Typical NNAT Activity | What Parents Should Do | Key Risk to Avoid |
|---|---|---|---|
| July–August 2026 | Districts publish gifted program calendars, testing policies, referral rules, and parent-consent procedures. | Check the district gifted education page, ask whether NNAT3 will be used, and note all registration or referral deadlines. | Assuming last year’s date is still valid. Gifted testing windows can shift each year. |
| September–November 2026 | Common fall universal-screening window for students in designated grades. | Confirm the exact test day, device/paper format, makeup policy, and whether all students are tested automatically. | Missing consent forms or student ID setup for online testing. |
| December 2026–January 2027 | Makeup testing, score processing, parent reports, and midyear referral review. | Ask when score reports will be released and which score type is used for eligibility decisions. | Confusing percentile rank with percentage correct. |
| February–April 2027 | Spring gifted testing, private-school screening, appeals, retesting, or second-round evaluation. | Prepare supporting documents if your district uses multiple measures such as achievement scores, teacher ratings, or portfolios. | Relying only on one test score when the district uses a full eligibility matrix. |
| May–June 2027 | Placement decisions, gifted service notifications, next-year course recommendations, or summer enrichment planning. | Request written interpretation of the report and ask what services the score may qualify the student for. | Assuming a high score automatically guarantees placement in every district. |
| July–August 2027 | Appeal deadlines, new school-year rosters, retest planning, and transfer-student review. | Save score reports and verify whether the score transfers to a new school or district. | Losing the report before a school transfer or appeal window. |
NNAT3 Levels by Grade and Age Range
NNAT3 uses levels so that students see items appropriate for their grade and developmental stage. The school chooses the level according to its testing plan. Age-based norms are used for score interpretation, so a student’s age on test day matters when reports are generated.
| NNAT3 Level | Common Grade(s) | Valid Age Range | Typical Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|
| Level A | Kindergarten | 4:0 to 7:11 | Early gifted screening, readiness for advanced enrichment, young learner reasoning patterns. |
| Level B | Grade 1 | 5:0 to 9:11 | Primary gifted program review and early visual-reasoning screening. |
| Level C | Grade 2 | 6:0 to 10:11 | Common gifted identification year in many elementary districts. |
| Level D | Grades 3–4 | 7:0 to 11:11 | Upper-elementary gifted screening, late referrals, transfer-student testing. |
| Level E | Grades 5–6 | 9:6 to 14:11 | Middle-grade gifted screening and accelerated placement support. |
| Level F | Grades 7–9 | 11:0 to 17:11 | Middle-school/high-school gifted, advanced academic, or selective program review. |
| Level G | Grades 10–12 | 14:0 to 17:11 | Older-student assessment when a nonverbal ability measure is needed. |
Format, Timing, and Pacing
The NNAT3 is compact compared with many admissions exams. Students answer 48 items. They have 30 minutes for the test questions, while the whole testing block may take longer because the teacher or proctor gives directions and walks students through sample items.
Items
48 multiple-choice questions, usually arranged in approximate order of difficulty. The test is not based on school curriculum content.
Working Time
30 minutes for the actual questions. Students should stay calm and avoid spending too long on one visual puzzle.
Administration Time
About 35–45 minutes including directions, sample items, setup, and transitions.
Time per Question Formula
Because the test contains 48 items in 30 minutes, the average target pace is:
This does not mean a student must spend exactly 37.5 seconds on every item. Easier items may take less time, while later items may take more. A better strategy is to work steadily, mark the best answer, and avoid getting stuck.
| Clock Time Used | Approximate Item Target | What It Means |
|---|---|---|
| 5 minutes | About 8 items | Student is still early in the test. Accuracy matters more than panic speed. |
| 10 minutes | About 16 items | Student should be settled into the pattern-recognition rhythm. |
| 15 minutes | About 24 items | Halfway point. If far behind, answer steadily and skip over any item that freezes progress. |
| 20 minutes | About 32 items | Later items may become more visually complex. Keep scanning rows and columns carefully. |
| 25 minutes | About 40 items | Final stretch. No blanks should remain if the format requires all answers. |
| 30 minutes | 48 items | Test work ends. Students should not continue after time is called. |
Question Skills and Reasoning Types
NNAT questions use figures, shapes, colors, missing pieces, and visual matrices. Families often describe the practice skills using labels such as pattern completion, reasoning by analogy, serial reasoning, and spatial visualization. The official purpose is broader: students must look at visual relationships and infer the rule that makes the missing answer fit.
Pattern Completion
Students see a larger design with a missing part and choose the option that completes the image. The key is to inspect the full structure, not just the empty box. Look for color, orientation, border, line direction, shade, and symmetry.
Reasoning by Analogy
Students compare visual relationships. For example, if one shape changes by rotation, color, or added parts, the student must apply the same rule to another shape. This is like a word analogy, but no language knowledge is required.
Serial Reasoning
Students identify a sequence or progression across a row or column. The rule might involve rotation, alternation, increasing parts, decreasing parts, movement, or repeating cycles. A good habit is to ask, “What changes from one box to the next?”
Spatial Visualization
Students mentally rotate, flip, combine, or compare shapes. These items reward careful visual tracking. Students should look for orientation, mirror images, overlapping shapes, and changes across both rows and columns.
NNAT Score Formulas and Interpretation
NNAT score reports can include several score types. The most important thing for families is to understand that a percentile rank is not the same as percentage correct. A student can answer a certain number of items correctly, but the final interpretation depends on the student’s age, test level, scaled score conversion, and norm group.
Raw Score
The raw score is the simplest score: the number of items answered correctly.
Accuracy Percentage
Accuracy percentage is useful for practice sessions, but it is not the same as the official percentile rank.
Naglieri Ability Index
The Naglieri Ability Index, or NAI, is a normalized standard score. It is commonly reported on a scale from 40 to 160, with an average of 100 and a standard deviation of 16.
A useful rule of thumb is that scores from 84 to 116 are within about one standard deviation of the average, while scores from 68 to 132 are within about two standard deviations. Very high NAI scores should be interpreted carefully with the official district policy because gifted eligibility cutoffs vary.
| Score Type | What It Means | Parent Interpretation Tip |
|---|---|---|
| Raw Score | Number of items correct out of 48. | Useful for practice tracking, but not enough for official eligibility decisions. |
| Scaled Score | Converted score that links performance across levels/forms. | Used internally to support fair score comparisons and normative reporting. |
| NAI | Naglieri Ability Index; average 100, standard deviation 16, range 40–160. | Often the key standard score on the report. |
| Percentile Rank | Shows the percentage of same-age peers who scored at or below that level. | A 95th percentile rank is not 95% correct. It means relative standing in the norm group. |
| Stanine | Simplified 1–9 score scale, where 5 is average. | Good for quick interpretation; less detailed than NAI or percentile rank. |
| NCE | Normal Curve Equivalent; another normalized score used by some reports. | More technical; usually less important to parents than NAI and percentile rank. |
8-Week NNAT Preparation Timetable
NNAT preparation should build familiarity without overtraining. For young children especially, short sessions are better than long lectures. A strong plan uses 10–20 minute practice blocks, visual puzzles, pattern language, and calm test-day routines.
Orientation and visual pattern language
Introduce missing pieces, rows, columns, rotation, flip, shading, size, direction, symmetry, and “what changed?” thinking.
Core reasoning practice
Practice pattern completion, analogies, sequences, and matrix reasoning. Keep sessions short and end before frustration builds.
Mixed visual puzzles and stamina
Mix several question styles in one session. Ask the student to explain the rule visually: “The shape rotates,” “the color alternates,” or “one part is added each step.”
Timed practice
Use one or two short timed sets. The target is not speed alone; it is calm progress with fewer avoidable mistakes.
Light review and confidence
Review the most common visual rules, sleep properly, prepare materials, and avoid heavy cramming in the final 48 hours.
Good NNAT practice looks like
- Short, consistent visual reasoning sessions
- Pattern explanation in simple language
- Calm correction after mistakes
- Practice with rows, columns, rotations, and missing parts
Avoid these mistakes
- Trying to memorize answers
- Doing long practice sessions with young children
- Over-focusing on one cutoff score
- Ignoring the local district’s eligibility policy
Interactive NNAT Tools
NNAT3 Level Finder
NNAT Pacing Calculator
NAI Score Explainer
Testing Window Planner
Parent Checklist Before NNAT Test Day
Use this checklist after your school announces the NNAT testing window. It helps prevent the most common mistakes: missing forms, misunderstanding the test format, and misreading the score report.
| Feature | NNAT | CogAT |
|---|---|---|
| Main focus | Nonverbal visual reasoning | Verbal, Quantitative, and Nonverbal reasoning batteries |
| Typical length | 48 items; 30 minutes working time | Varies by level and form; complete test includes multiple subtests |
| Language load | Low; pictorial directions and visual items | Depends on battery; verbal battery has more language involvement |
| Common use | Gifted screening, broad identification, underrepresented student review | Gifted identification, ability profile, instructional planning |
Frequently Asked Questions About the NNAT
Is NNAT the same as NNAT3?
NNAT is the common name for the Naglieri Nonverbal Ability Test. NNAT3 refers to the third edition. Many schools and parents use “NNAT” informally even when the current edition is NNAT3.
Does NNAT require reading?
The test is designed to be nonverbal. Students work with figures and visual patterns rather than reading passages or vocabulary. The proctor gives directions and sample items before the test begins.
How many questions are on NNAT3?
NNAT3 forms contain 48 items. Students have 30 minutes to work on the test questions.
What is a good NNAT score?
A good score depends on the local program. An NAI of 100 is average for same-age peers. Higher percentile ranks may support gifted identification, but districts decide their own cutoffs and often use multiple measures.
Can my child retake the NNAT?
Retesting depends on the local district or school policy. Some programs allow makeup testing for absences; others allow appeal testing or future-year testing. Ask your gifted coordinator before the testing window closes.
Should students prepare for NNAT?
Reasonable familiarization can help students understand the format. Heavy memorization is not useful. The best preparation is brief visual reasoning practice, calm pacing, and comfort with rows, columns, missing pieces, rotations, and patterns.
Official Source Notes for Editors
- Pearson NNAT3 product information page: use for publisher, purpose, nonverbal design, paper/online options, and the official video link.
- Pearson NNAT3 Levels A–D manual: use for Level A–D grade/age ranges, 48 items, 30-minute working time, and scoring interpretation.
- Pearson NNAT3 Levels E–G manual: use for Level E–G grade/age ranges, 48 items, 30-minute working time, and NAI score scale.
- Local district gifted program pages: use for exact dates, referral deadlines, eligibility cutoffs, and appeal policies because NNAT dates are local.
